WhatsApp has teamed up with National Trading Standards to warn users over a new text scam targeting your personal details.

A text or WhatsApp message from a “friend in need” asking for money or personal information could be a scammer, the new awareness campaign has warned.

New research found more than half (59%) of people have received or nobody who has received a message-based text scam.

The “Stop. Think. Call.” campaign aims to help educate people on how to protect themselves and their WhatsApp account from message-based scams.

Message-based scams could include text messages as well as those received on WhatsApp.

‘Stop. Think. Call.’ Campaign launched to protect WhatsApp users

Glasgow Times: The new campaign offers guidance to people targeted by scammers.(Alamy/PA)The new campaign offers guidance to people targeted by scammers.(Alamy/PA)

The campaign urges people to:

Stop: Take time before you respond. Make sure your WhatsApp two-step verification is switched on to protect your account, that you are happy with your privacy settings.

Think: Does this request make sense? Are they asking for money? Remember that scammers prey on people’s kindness, trust and willingness to help.

Call: Verify that it really is your friend or family member by calling them directly, or asking them to share a voice note. Only when you are 100% sure the request is from someone you know and trust, should you consider it. If it turns out to be untrue, report it to Action Fraud.

National Trading Standards issue warning over text scams

Louise Baxter, head of the National Trading Standards scams team and Friends Against Scams warned people over a rise in message-based scams.

She said: “Scammers send messages that appear to come from a friend or family member asking for personal information, money or a six-digit pin number.

“The messages are sent from the compromised accounts of your friends, so they look as if they’re coming from someone you know, or from an unknown number claiming to be a friend who has lost their phone or been ‘locked out’ of their account.

“These kinds of scams are particularly cruel as they prey on our kindness and desire to help friends and family.”

WhatsApp shares advice with users amid scam warning

Kathryn Harnett, policy manager at WhatsApp, said: “WhatsApp protects our users’ personal messages with end-to-end encryption, but we want to remind people that we all have a role to play in keeping our accounts safe by remaining vigilant to the threat of scammers.

“We advise all users never to share their six-digit pin code with others, not even friends or family, and recommend that all users set up two-step verification for added security.

“If you receive a suspicious message (even if you think you know who it is from), calling or requesting a voice note is the fastest and simplest way to check someone is who they say they are. A friend in need is a friend worth calling.”

The WhatsApp scams you need to look out for

Glasgow Times: The WhatsApp scams you need to look out for. (PA)The WhatsApp scams you need to look out for. (PA)

Citizens Advice Scams Action is also supporting the campaign, having seen an increase in messaging scams over the past year, including friend-in-need scams such as:

  • A scammer who claimed they were a friend stuck abroad and had to find hundreds of pounds to get home. When the person said they were unable to help they were blocked.
  • A parent who realised that a scammer was posing as their son asking for money via WhatsApp. They called their son to check and realised it was a scam.
  • A parent who received a WhatsApp message supposedly from their daughter saying they had had to change their number. It went on to ask for help paying a bill but the parent realised it was a scam.

Scambassador Joel Dommett said: “Simply remembering to Stop. Think. Call. when you get an unusual message may save you a lot of money and inconvenience in the long run.”